Meaning & History
Usage and Cultural Significance
Rebecca has maintained consistent usage since the Reformation, buoyed by classic literary characters: a Jewish woman in Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe (1819) and the eponymous deceased title figure in Daphne du Maurier's novel Rebecca (1938). The variant Beccah or Rach spelling does not diminish its biblical resonance, and diminutives such as Becca and Becky are common nicknames.
Etymology
The root name Rebecca comes from Hebrew Rivqa, connoting a binding or snaring. The spelling Rebeccah adds an unetymological 'h' to the more standard Rebecca, possibly by analogy with Biblical Rebekah. Variant forms include Rivqa (Biblical Hebrew) and Rebekka (Norwegian, Icelandic).
- Meaning: Bind, snare (from Hebrew)
- Origin: Variant of Rebecca
- Type: Given name
- Usage regions: English-speaking countries (chiefly); also Swedish, Norwegian, Slovak as Rebeka/Rebekka
Related Names
Sources: Wiktionary — Rebeccah